June 14, 2017 20H:50 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME
Twelve people have died in a west London tower block fire and the number of deaths is expected to rise, police have said.
Firefighters rescued 65 people from Grenfell Tower in north Kensington, after they were called at 00:54 BST.
Witnesses said people were trapped in the tower block, screaming for help and yelling for their children to be saved.
Theresa May said there will be a full investigation and "if there are any lessons to be learned they will be".
It is understood that "several hundred" people would have been in the block when the fire broke out, most of them sleeping.
The ambulance service said 68 patients had been taken to six hospitals across London, with 18 in critical care. A further 10 patients made their own way to hospital.
During the night, eyewitnesses said they saw lights - thought to be mobile phones or torches - flashing at the top of the block of flats.
Trapped residents came to their windows - some holding children.
An emergency number - 0800 0961 233 - has been set up for anyone concerned about friends or family.
Commander Stuart Cundy, of the Metropolitan Police, said: "Sadly I can confirm that there are now 12 people that have died that we know of.
"This is going to be a long and complex recovery operation and I do anticipate that the number of fatalities will sadly increase beyond those 12."
He said several people were still unaccounted for. "Sadly, I don't anticipate there will be further survivors," he said.
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London Fire Brigade Assistant Commissioner, Steve Apter, said there were "still pockets of fire yet to be extinguished in places particularly difficult to reach" but "almost all" of the building had been searched.
The service was using drones to help assess the integrity of the building, so the fire service could plan its next steps, he said.
"We certainly intend to be here through the night," he said.
Checks have been carried out on the building and it is not in danger of collapsing, London Fire Brigade said.
Paul Munakr, who lives on the seventh floor, managed to escape.
"As I was going down the stairs, there were firefighters, truly amazing firefighters, that were actually going upstairs, to the fire, trying to get as many people out the building as possible," he told the BBC.
He said he was alerted to the fire not by fire alarms but by people on the street below, shouting "don't jump, don't jump".
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Eyewitness Jody Martin said: "I watched one person falling out, I watched another woman holding her baby out the window... hearing screams.
"I was yelling at everyone to get down and they were saying 'We can't leave our apartments, the smoke is too bad on the corridors'."
At the scene
By Claire Heald, BBC News
People have been standing out here for hours, waiting for news.
They come and go, visit the emergency centre for help and information, leave or arrive in tears.
On the pavement outside the Rugby Portobello emergency centre, a well-intended pile of water bottles, duvets, food, clothes, random toys and games sprawls.
Red Cross staff struggle to sort it as kind commuters add to it - foil pouches of squash, blankets, cola. Some bring homemade sandwiches.
The collection is off to a nearby Westway rescue centre, where people who have lost, or been evacuated from their homes, might spend the night.
Fire crews are fewer, police remain in force. The local MP has been. NHS workers, counsellors, volunteers come and go.
You hear snatched conversations - who is missing, who has news? And wails and crying.
Carers who worked in the tower were swapping anecdotes about the clients with limited mobility, agoraphobia even, or multiple children who they know would have struggled to escape.
Some are really angry and have questions - whether they're talking about inequality in London's richest borough, or cladding and fire stairs.
It's very warm. All day the sun has shone in clear blue skies - save for a plume of smoke, decreasing but persisting, from Grenfell Tower.
Michael Paramasivan, who lives on the seventh floor with his girlfriend and young daughter, said he ignored official advice to stay in your home.
"If we had stayed in that flat, we would've perished. My gut instinct told me just to get the girls out. I wrapped the little one up because of the smoke and I just got them out."
Another resident, Zoe, who lives on the fourth floor, said she was woken by a neighbour banging on her door.
"The whole landing was thick with smoke. The smoke alarms weren't going off but the way it spread so quickly from the fourth floor, all the way up to the 23rd floor was scary."
The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea council said it had placed 44 households so far in emergency accommodation.
For those unable to return to their homes, a rest centre has been set up at Westway Sports Centre, a statement said, and residents affected should call 020 7361 3008.
Grenfell Tower, North Kensington
- 127 flats
- 24 storeys
- 20 residential levels
- 4 mixed levels of community areas and residential flats
- 2016 refurbishment completed
AFP
Grenfell Tower underwent an £8.6m refurbishment as part of a wider transformation of the estate, that was completed in May last year.
Work included new exterior cladding and a communal heating system.
The 24-storey tower, containing about 120 flats, is managed by the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation on behalf of the council.
Before and during the refurbishment, the local Grenfell Action Group claimed that the block constituted a fire risk and residents warned that site access for emergency vehicles was "severely restricted".
Policing and fire minister Mr Hurd said checks were now planned on tower blocks that have gone through similar refurbishment.
He said authorities discussed "a process whereby we seek to identify towers that might be in a similar process of refurbishment (and) run a system of checks and inspections".
Construction firm Rydon, which carried out the refurbishment, said it was "shocked to hear of the devastating fire" and originally stated that the work "met all required building control, fire regulation and health and safety standards".
It later issued a new statement removing the previous mention of the building meeting fire regulation standards, instead saying the project met "all required building regulations".
In a statement, Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation, said it was "too early to speculate what caused the fire and contributed to its spread".
Council leader Nick Paget-Brown said the buildings were regularly inspected, but a "thorough investigation" was needed.
A review of building regulations covering fire safety was promised by Prime Minister Theresa May's chief of staff, Gavin Barwell, last year, when he was a government minister, but has not been published.
Responding to earlier reports, the Department for Communities and Local Government said it was "simply not true" that a report has been "sat on".
Following the Lakanal House fire in south London in 2009, the coroner recommended the guidance relating to fire safety within the Building Regulations was simplified.
The government said this work was "ongoing".
The government also wrote to councils encouraging them to consider retro-fitting sprinklers, as recommended by the coroner, a statement said.
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